American snapshot

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American snapshot: A worker on Workers’ Day, downtown

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

American flags and wide-brimmed hats for sale at a May Day immigrant rights rally in downtown L.A., May 1, 2011

One of several May Day rallies taking place in Los Angeles today is an immigrant rights march downtown this afternoon, the latest in a series of annual large rallies organized by immigrant rights advocates each May 1 since 2006, the year of the so-called “Great American Boycott.” 

A constant presence during these marches are the people who are work them, not as organizers but as entrepreneurs. They are almost exclusively immigrants, business-minded individuals who come to the rallies with their hot dog and paleta carts or coolers loaded with sliced fruit to cater to hungry protesters, who arrive toting wide-brimmed hats to sell to those wanting to fend off the sun, or who bring along a load of miniature plastic American flags for the patriotically inclined.

During last year’s May Day immigrant rights march in Los Angeles, which drew about 4,000 people downtown, I snapped several portraits of these enterprising workers who never let up. Because they are in the land of opportunity for a reason.

As one woman selling hot dogs last year, then recently dismissed from her clothing factory job for lack of work authorization, told me: ”I’m here working, but I’m also supporting the march.”

Count on seeing many others like her during the rallies today.

American snapshot: Sixth Street Bridge

Photo by David McNew/Getty Images

The Sixth Street Bridge as seen from underneath, February 21, 2008

Goodbye, Sixth Street Bridge.

Last fall, Los Angeles city officials voted to tear it down, fearing it would not survive a major earthquake because of the faulty concrete that has dogged it since it opened in the 1930s, made weaker with time. The city is on a global search for a design “that honors the bridge’s history, but also reflects the city’s style of today,” KPCC reports. The winning design will be chosen next fall.

It’s one of a series of historic bridges that connect the Eastside to downtown, spanning the L.A. River. This one is special in its own way, having served as the site of a memorable Dia de Los Muertos festival that turned the bridge into a cross-cultural gathering place. And as with the rest of the bridges, its footings have served as a canvas for generations of graffiti artists.

The bridge is also special to anyone who grew up on the Eastside, me included, using the bridges on a regular basis as their connection to the rest of the city. No date yet for demolition, but construction is planned to begin in 2015.

American snapshot: Logan Circle, D.C.

Photo courtesy of Calvin N. Ho

Calvin Ho of the L.A.-based Asian diaspora blog The Plaid Bag Connection encountered this – Ethiopian injera bread, served on a standard-issue Chinese restaurant plate – while visiting Washington, D.C. over the weekend. ”The world we live in,” he tweeted yesterday.

I’d initially wondered if the restaurant was in Los Angeles, as this combo would make sense here, too. But it’s the Lalibela Restaurant, an Ethiopian eatery in D.C.’s Logan Circle neighborhood.

American snapshot: Boyle Heights

Taylor Soppe/KPCC

Betty Uchida and Lucille Weiss clink glasses during the Seder ritual in Boyle Heights, April 2, 2012

A great photo taken by Taylor Soppe for KPCC tied to a sweet little story, that of a group of elderly Jewish and Japanese American retirees sharing a Passover Seder in Boyle Heights.

Their celebration Monday made perfect sense. The historic neighborhood has long been a port of entry for immigrants, today mostly Latino. In the past, it was also home to large communities of Japanese and European Jewish immigrants, some of whom remain in retirement homes.

The residents of two retirement homes were brought together for the Seder, in which the Passover staples were followed by a sushi lunch. L.A. at its best.

American snapshot: Gardena

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

A former Taco Bell turned ramen house? This place looks like it may once have dished up Crunchy Taco Supremes, but its sign now advertises homemade ramen noodles. It sits on Redondo Beach Blvd. in Gardena, one of L.A. County’s Japanese American hubs and home to a growing population of Asian Americans, who represent more than a quarter of its residents.

An L.A. Latino kid’s memories of Chinatown

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

A post earlier this week featured a photo of a restaurant wall in downtown Los Angeles’ historic Chinatown, painted with an only-in-L.A. kind of message stating its claim to fame. And it prompted this reminiscence from reader and former Angeleno Miguel Corona:

Chinatown is a place of special memories from my childhood. During my two years of junior high school, I would take two buses to travel from Atwater to Chinatown (Hill St). My school, Queen of Angels, is no longer there, but I still have vivid memories of traveling from a predominantly Latino neighborhood to a school surrounded by a much different culture. Urban cultural blending at its best. Hollywood movie trucks were always around and sometimes our school was used for some random movie scene. Good times.

American snapshot: Boyle Heights

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

February begins tomorrow, but flower shops throughout Los Angeles have already spent weeks advertising their Valentine’s Day packages (paquetes) in different ways and multiple languages. At this place on First Street, the chunky-cute hand painted birdies are an added bonus.

American snapshot: Hollenbeck Park

Photo courtesy of Steve Saldivar

It used to be a common sight, people reading newspapers in the park. It isn’t so much anymore, but this reader on a recent Saturday embodies the research: Latinos remain more loyal to print media than their non-Latino American counterparts, one of the reasons why Spanish-language media has fared better overall than English-language outlets in the media industry downturn.

Add fallen leaves, green grass and a bench in Boyle Heights’ Hollenbeck Park for a perfect reading spot.